A new image of the Helix planetary nebula shows a
rich background of distant galaxies. Astronomers used the European Southern Observatory's (ESO) La Silla
Observatory in Chile to capture the view.
The Helix Nebula (NGC 7293) lies about 700 light-years
away in the constellation of Aquarius, or the Water Bearer. It is one of the
closest and most spectacular examples of a planetary nebula. These exotic
objects have nothing to do with planets, but represent the final
blooming of Sun-like stars before their retirement as white dwarfs.
Shells of gas are blown off from a star's surface, and
shine under the harsh ultraviolet radiation from the faint, but very hot,
central star. The main ring of the Helix
Nebula is about two light-years across, or half the distance between the
Sun and its closest stellar neighbor.
Despite being photographically very spectacular, the
Helix is hard to see visually as its light is thinly spread over a large area
of sky. The history of its discovery is also rather obscure. It first appears
in a list of new objects compiled by the German astronomer Karl Ludwig Harding
in 1824. The name Helix comes from the rough corkscrew shape seen in the
earlier photographs.
Although the Helix looks very much like a doughnut,
studies have shown that it possibly consists of at least two separate discs
with outer rings and filaments. The brighter inner disc seems to be expanding
at about 62,137 miles per hour (100 000 km/h), and probably formed over 12,000
years.
Because the Helix is relatively close it covers an area
of the sky about a quarter of the full Moon its complex structure can be
studied in much greater detail than most other planetary nebulae. All around
the inside of the ring are small blobs, known as "cometary knots," with faint
tails extending away from the central star like droplets of liquid running down
a sheet of glass. Although they look tiny, each knot is about as large as our
Solar System.
These knots have been extensively studied, both with the
ESO Very Large Telescope and with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, but
remain only partially understood. A careful look at the central part of this
object reveals not only the knots, but also many remote galaxies seen through
the thinly spread glowing
gas. Some of these seem to be gathered in separate galaxy groups scattered
over various parts of the image.